As A Little Girl Growing Up In Colombia Now
Cultural differences: what is a typical Colombian family like?
the world felt like a perpetual carnival painted in the three primary colors of our flag: the deep blue of the endless Pacific sky, the bright yellow of the成熟的 guayaba (guava) sun, and the passionate red of the novelas my grandmother watched religiously every afternoon. To be a little girl in Colombia is not merely to experience a childhood; it is to be baptized into a rich, chaotic, and deeply sensory symphony where the magical realism of Gabriel García Márquez isn't a genre—it's a documentary. as a little girl growing up in colombia
The colegio (school) is primarily public and often underfunded, yet it is a sanctuary. Cultural differences: what is a typical Colombian family
you were hyper-aware of danger, but not in the way foreign news reported it. The danger was los vidrios rotos (broken glass on top of walls), the scorpion hiding in your shoe, or setting the arepa on fire because you looked away for one second. The violence of the 80s and 90s was a shadow in the adult conversations, a lowered voice at the dinner table, a reason you couldn't walk to the tienda alone after 6 PM. But for a child, day-to-day survival was about pragmatic bravery. The colegio (school) is primarily public and often